From Above

War, Violence, and Verticality

Edited by Peter Adey, Mark Whitehead, and Alison Williams

A series of in-depth accounts of 'the view from above' in shaping notions of territory, security and conflict.

Among the contributors are renowned international experts such as Derek Gregory, Trevor Paglen, Caren Kaplan, Klaus Dodds and Priya Satia .

From Above

War, Violence, and Verticality

Edited by Peter Adey, Mark Whitehead, and Alison Williams

Description

The arrival of the aerostatic balloon at the end of the nineteenth century ushered in a new perspective on the battlefield, taking over from the mount--the hill at the edge of the field of combat--and the fortified tower positioned within it. Since then there has been no perspective more culpable in war, violence and security than the aerial one. From Above explores the aerial view in new depth and clarity. It draws in vivid detail on studies of the aerial perspective today and on rich empirical investigations of the aerial view from the past. Chapters examine a range of case studies and examples, from Vietnam and the balloon prospect, camouflage, colonial policing, to today's drone wars. The contributors draw on perspectives from history, international relations,
political geography and cultural studies in order to provide a truly interdisciplinary perspective on the view from above. They also consider the view from above in relation to its technologies, legalities, practices, doctrines, and visual culture.

Among the contributors are renowned international experts such as Derek Gregory, Trevor Paglen, Caren Kaplan, Klaus Dodds and Priya Satia.

The aerial view is a perspective that can no longer be ignored, one that is of growing significance for those interested in geopolitics, militarism and conflict.

From Above

War, Violence, and Verticality

Edited by Peter Adey, Mark Whitehead, and Alison Williams

Author Information

Peter Adey is Reader in Human Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London and author of Mobility and Aerial Life.

Mark Whitehead is Reader at the Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, Aberystwyth University, and author of, inter alia, State, Science and the Skies: Governmentalities of the British Atmosphere.

Alison Williams is Lecturer in Human Geography at the school of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University and the author of numerous articles on 'vertical geopolitics.'

From Above

War, Violence, and Verticality

Edited by Peter Adey, Mark Whitehead, and Alison Williams

Reviews and Awards

"Packed with historical knowledge and theoretical insights, this collection opens our eyes to the metaphors and technologies embedded in the most ordinary expressions such as above, below, depth, flight, earth, and sky. In chapter after chapter, the aerial view presents itself not only as a militaristic space and a geopolitical theatre but also and above all as a conceptual event in modernity."--Rey Chow, author of Entanglements, or Transmedial Thinking about Capture

"Being above using aircraft to loiter within the atmosphere or on the edge of space has long been recognised as a definitive means of gaining military and strategic advantage over those bound by the earth's surface. The last century has witnessed countless episodes of annihilation and killing by states and militaries from up in the sky. But how can we approach the deep connections between verticality, violence and war? From Above a dazzling and definitive collection provides the answers. Bringing together the very best thinkers from Geography, Cultural Studies, Art Theory and Political Science, the result is an extraordinary and searing book. Here, for the first time, is a volume which fully excavates how targeting and killing from above was invented, generalised and
rendered completely normal in the past century and a half. A must-read for anyone concerned with the nature of contemporary political violence." --Stephen Graham, Newcastle University

"Bombings and assassinations meet with surveys and cartography in this collection of critically engaged essays on the combined force of aerial knowledge and aerial power. Offering a much-needed counter to the official line on air power, the volume spells out the extent to which reconnaissance and violence operate in tandem from above." -- Mark Neocleous, Professor of the Critique of Political Economy, Politics and History, Brunel University